EA

Check out the new Official Anthem Trailer from the 2018 Game Awards. Through the power of the javelins, skilled pilots called lancers were able to fight back against this perilous world. But a new enemy has emerged, seeking to harness the limitless power of the Anthem. And if they succeed,

Nvidia and DICE recently revealed an update to Battlefield V would allow for increased RTX performance. They claimed that making strides with the performance cost of Ray-tracing meant gamers could enjoy Battlefield V at 1440p 60 FPS. Well, putting the single-player game through its paces highlights how well the game

The blurb reads: Battlefield V Update – Chapter 1: Overture, available from December 4th. In Battlefield V’s live service, Tides of War, new experiences, evolving gameplay, and an expanding world will be available for all players – every chapter brings a new battlefield. Free to download for all Battlefield V

Nvidia’s much touted and rather expensive to get into ray tracing effects are highlighted in our comparison video. We put two scenes side-by-side showing the Battlefield V ray tracing with RTX on and off. It needs to be said, the differences are subtle and not something that is immediately obvious

Here is a look at the Battlefield V War Stories intro mission using the Nvidia recommended Ray Tracing settings at 1440p (using RTX 2080 Ti). The game options use the Ultra preset with ray tracing reflections at medium. For comparison, take a look at the same scenes with Ray Tracing

After so many years playing video games it’s easy to be dismissive of video game grand entrances. We’ve seen them all from Solid Snake arriving on the tanker in Metal Gear Solid 2, to more recent offerings. Like the rather drawn-out opening of Red Dead Redemption 2. However, we were

EA/DICE’s Battlefield V releases on November 20th and to whet the appetite here is the single player trailer. Discover the untold stories of World War 2 with Battlefield V’s single player War Stories. In Nordlys, resist German occupation in Norway, sabotage behind enemy lines as an unlikely English soldier in